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Free Article
Watch Your Language!
The language you use every day — your word choice, sequence, and tone — plays a more critical
role in how you’re perceived than you may imagine. How you respond to a question, a compliment,
even a comment on the weather, affects what people think about you, your abilities, and your work in very
subtle yet very powerful ways.
Let’s look at three examples, including some simple changes you can make to have the most
positive impact on your career and your relationships.
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Yes, thanks, that was a good job
How you respond to a compliment influences people’s perception of your confidence and ability
(or lack thereof).
Like most people, you’ve probably found that compliments are harder to accept than criticism.
From early childhood, you were almost certainly taught to ask for feedback (a.k.a. criticism)
and to be modest about (i.e., discourage) compliments.
When you do the “aw, shucks, it weren’t nuthin’” shuffle, brushing the
compliment off with embarrassment or downplaying your accomplishment, people believe you.
Believing your response, they overlook the hours of overtime put in by your team, the expertise and
skill that were required, and the polish you put on the finished result.
On the other hand, if you adopt a superior stance by taking all the credit for a team effort or
claiming that only you out of all the people in the organization could possibly have pulled it off,
you’ll be written off as arrogant and dangerously independent (not a team player).
Instead, practice a middle-ground approach, preferably by role-playing with a friend outside the office.
Get comfortable with language that asserts your confidence and competence without false pride or
arrogance. “Yes, thanks, my team and I did a really terrific job!” is a great response.
“Thank you — I appreciate your recognizing the effort it took to get that done well,”
is another.
When someone compliments you personally, consider asking for more detailed feedback. A compliment
can feel uncomfortable because it often implies judgement — positive judgement, to be sure, but
judgement nonetheless. “You’re a great facilitator,” is a judgement that inevitably
causes comparison in your mind to all the facilitators you know who are better than you are, creating
instant disbelief and discomfort.
Thank the speaker and ask, “What about my facilitation really worked for you?” This draws
out specific comments (“I like how you make sure everyone gets equal time”) that are
actually useful to you in developing your facilitation skills.
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Accentuate the Positive
Have you noticed that people complain in habitual ways? They use the same words to describe all the
things they’re not happy about. One person might call anyone he disagrees with a “schmoozing
backstabber.” Someone else might say any disappointing event — whether in the past or
anticipated — was a “disaster.”
Did it occur to you that your complaining habits are just as obvious to others as theirs are to you?
Management views complainers as losers. Therefore, complainers never get the best projects and are
consistently passed over for promotion. You may not be an out-and-out complainer, but you almost
certainly have typical complaining habits and hot-button circumstances that trigger those habits.
Pay attention for a few days to identify your habit. What triggers your complaints and what words do
you typically use? (If you can’t figure it out, enlist the help of a trusted friend.)
Then pick more positive ways of expressing yourself. If positive replacements feel too artificial, try
a factual way of describing the person or situation, without any emotional load.
The “schmoozing backstabber” might be “politically savvy,” or could just be
“Joe.” That “disastrous project” might be “unfortunately delayed because
of new requirements,“ or just ”the printer upgrade project.”
Save your complaining and venting for friends, spouses, and partners outside the office. Your
career will thank you for it.
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Choose Want instead of Need
Take a few days or a week to experiment with what happens when you use “want” instead of
“need,” “should,” “gotta,” “have to,” and “must.”
“I want to leave for work now.”
“I want to finish this report by the end of the day.”
“I want to go to the staff meeting.”
If this feels awkward, especially if you feel as if you’re lying to yourself, add on the reason
why you want to do these things.
“I want to leave for work now because I have a better day when I’m at the office on time.”
“I want to finish this report by the end of the day because my boss needs it first thing in the
morning.”
“I want to go to the staff meeting because when I don’t go, my team-mates say sarcastic
things about my priorities and my boss gets mad.”
You may find it such a pleasant way of looking at the world that you adopt “want” as your
word of choice in every possible situation. In fact, I have a good friend who creates “want to
do” lists instead of “to do” lists. She finds it significantly more motivating!
How can you adjust your language to have a positive effect on how you’re perceived — and
on your career? Drop me a line and let me know!
“Language exerts hidden power, like a moon on the tides.” Rita Mae Brown, 1944 - , American
author, screenwriter, and activist.
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